The Maharimbas,
Ancient Ways,
and Pacific Crest Hiker Join Forces to Aid Zimbabwe
Dance On for Africa!
2004
Loren Mach is a 34 year-old musician who is hiking
the Pacific Crest Trail to support the people whose music has
meant so much to him over the last 3 years. Three non-profit
organizations who help the people of Zimbabwe
will be the recipients of the money (currently over $18,000.
See www.zimwalk.org.) he
has raised from pledges and concerts as he hikes from the Mexican
border to Canada.
Loren has been passionately involved in music most of his life,
earning Percussion Performance Degrees from the Oberlin and
Cincinnati Conservatories of Music. But after a season as acting
principal percussionist with the New Mexico
symphony in Albuquerque
he walked away, turning his back on music for over 5 years.
It is his recent involvement in the Shona
(Zimbabwean) music community that has once again opened his
heart to being a musician. “My Shona
friends, and teachers like Cosmas
Magaya (see www.kutsinhira.org), have shown me so much
about music and life. Now its time for me to give something
back. I want to celebrate the musical and cultural influences
that Zimbabweans have shared with people in the U.S.
and demonstrate the reciprocal possibilities for us to help
people in Africa.”
Loren, who lives and plays music with groups in
Boulder Colorado,
has been hiking the trail since April
27, 2004. He will be in Corvallis,
joining local marimba groups here for a fundraiser on August 28, 2004 at the First Congregational United Church
of Christ, 4515 SW West Hills Road.
This event is hosted by Ancient Ways,
one of the non-profits his hike will support. Ancient Ways is
based here in the Mid-Valley (see www.ancient-ways.org)
and will receive all proceeds from this particular concert for
their project in Mhondoro, Zimbabwe,
Nhimbe for Progress.
Ancient Ways, founded in 1993, is a 501(
c)3 organization that is dedicated to preserving and
learning from traditional ways of indigenous peoples. Nhimbe
for Progress is their community development project in Zimbabwe
which was started in 1999. It has as its mission to promote
recognition of our spiritual and human relatedness to rural
Zimbabwean people by providing appropriate assistance where
the need exists, in an ecologically sound, self-sustaining,
and culturally respectful way, and by creating opportunity for
cultural exchange, which encourages unity and cooperative empowerment.
Nhimbe is an old-fashioned Shona
word referring to a community working together to help each
other in daily life, for example, during harvest time.
Currently, Nhimbe for
Progress helps seven villages in Zimbabwe
with school tuition for over 200 children, sponsoring pre-school,
building huts and fuel-efficient wood stoves, and the founding
of a Community Center with medical supplies, edible landscaping
and a library. The preschool receives most of its financial
support from the Sundborn Children’s
House, a Montessori preschool located in Albany.
All donations to Ancient Ways
are tax deductible; they are interested in how you would like
to see the money from this concert used. For more information
about this event, Nhimbe for Progress or Ancient
Ways, contact Jaiaen Beck at 541-258-8710
or zimbabwe@ancient-ways.org.
Loren will be joining the Ancient Ways Community
Marimba Ensemble, which will open for the local favorites The
Maharimbas at this fundraising concert.
The Maharimbas, of Corvallis,
play African and Caribbean traditional
music, plus originals and arrangements of contemporary music,
on marimbas and percussion. The public is invited to come and
“Dance On for Africa!” from
7 to 10:30. Suggested donation $5 to $20. $5.00 tickets are
for sale at the Grass Roots Bookstore. Pizza, snacks and cold
drinks will be available at the concert.